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Political Disappointment - A Cultural History from Reconstruction to the AIDS Crisis (Hardcover)
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Political Disappointment - A Cultural History from Reconstruction to the AIDS Crisis (Hardcover)
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Moving from the aftermath of Reconstruction through the AIDS
crisis, a new cultural history of the United States shows how
artists, intellectuals, and activists turned political
disappointment-the unfulfilled desire for change-into a basis for
solidarity. Sara Marcus argues that the defining texts in
twentieth-century American cultural history are records of
political disappointment. Through insightful and often surprising
readings of literature and sound, Marcus offers a new cultural
history of the last century, in which creative minds observed the
passing of moments of possibility, took stock of the losses
sustained, and fostered intellectual revolutions and unexpected
solidarities. Political Disappointment shows how, by confronting
disappointment directly, writers and artists helped to produce new
political meanings and possibilities. Marcus first analyzes works
by W. E. B. Du Bois, Charles Chesnutt, Pauline Hopkins, and the
Fisk Jubilee Singers that expressed the anguish of the early Jim
Crow era, during which white supremacy thwarted the rebuilding of
the country as a multiracial democracy. In the ensuing decades, the
Popular Front work songs and stories of Lead Belly and Tillie
Olsen, the soundscapes of the civil rights and Black Power
movements, the feminist poetry of Audre Lorde and Adrienne Rich,
and the queer art of Marlon Riggs and David Wojnarowicz continued
building the century-long archive of disappointment. Marcus shows
how defeat time and again gave rise to novel modes of protest and
new forms of collective practice, keeping alive the dream of a
better world. Disappointment has proved to be a durable, perhaps
even inevitable, feature of the democratic project, yet so too has
the resistance it precipitates. Marcus's unique history of the
twentieth century reclaims the unrealized desire for liberation as
a productive force in American literature and life.
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